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The mystery of Tiger Woods' new bracelet is solved

March 22, 2010 | 4:32
pm

The religious bracelet on Tiger Woods' left arm during his brief television interviews is a fairly common symbol of Buddhism, experts on the faith say.

The two thin bands encircling Woods' wrist came up Sunday, near the end of his interview with Golf Channel reporter Kelly Tilghman. Woods also spoke to ESPN. The interviews were his first since Woods' serial infidelity became known late last year and he began undergoing therapy.

Tilghman said she noticed the bracelet and asked what it meant.

“It's Buddhist,” Woods said, referring to his childhood faith. “It's for protection and strength. And I certainly need that.”

Woods explained that he had been wearing the bracelet since before he went into treatment, and that he would wear it during the Masters. Beyond that, he didn't further discuss its significance or origin.

However, it is common for Buddhists to wear such items as a reminder of their faith, said Jimmy Yu, professor of Buddhist and Chinese Studies at Florida State University in Tallahassee.

“Sometimes Buddhists, when they receive some kind of initiation into a certain practice, especially in the Tibetan Buddhist tradition, they would be given a red thread, (to) go around the wrist,” said Yu. “It sounds like this is what he was wearing.”

Wearing bracelets, necklaces or other reminders of their faith are fairly common for practitioners of Buddhism, Yu said.

-- Associated Press

Photo: In this image from video provided by the Golf Channel, Tiger Woods talks about the bracelet on his left wrist, during an interview with the Golf Channel that aired Sunday, March 21, 2010. Woods says the bracelet is a Buddhist symbol for "protection and strength". Credit: The Golf Channel.